Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 194, 23 June 1920 — Page 3

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELE? TRAM, RICHMOND. IND.. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 1920.

PAGE THREE

ATTACK INSPECTOR WITH RIFLES, BOMBS; DUBLIN IS AROUSED

(By Associated Press) LONDON, June 23. Great apprehension has been caused in Dublin by the attack on Assistant Inspector General Roberts yesterday which recalls the recent attempt to assassinate Field Marshal Viscount French, says a Dublin dispatch to the Times. Describing the incident the correspondent says RoBerts spent the night at his home at Sutton, a few miles out of the city, and returned by train at 10 o'clock in the morning. He was met there by an auto containing police officers and when it started for Dublin castle other policemen fell in behind. Ae the car neared the railway bridge at Beresford place, a party of men stepped from their place of concealment behind the pillars of the bridge, drew revolvers and opened fire. The occupants of the automobile instantly replied, and the shooting on both sides was almost continuous as long as the car was in sight of the attacking party. Explode Bombs in Firing. During the height of the firing two bombs were thrown, the explosions being heard over a large part of the city. Apparently neither the attackers or the police officers were injured by the bombs. Roberts was shot in the head at the first volley and fell against the chauffeur, who although shot through both legs, never lost his grip on the wheel, and drove the car at furious speed out of danger. It is said that beyond doubt Roberts owes his life to the chauffeur's presence of mind. The whole incident lasted only a couple of minutes, but during this time it is declared at least 50 shots were fired.

DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEE HEADS WHO WILL PLAY IMPORTANT PART AT CONVENTION

Homer S. Cummin8. 'as temporary and possible permanent chairman of tbe Democratic national convention, and J. Bruce Kremer. Vice chairman of the committee, will be two of the busiest Dems at the meet.

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Homer S. Cummings, at left, and J. Bruce Kremer.

UDNDONBERRY, June 23. There was no cessation today in the battle between Unionists and Nationalist factions, which has kept Londonderry in

a terror stricken state for some days i

past. During the night the rival factions erected additional barricades from which they kept firing. At times the Fhooting reached the intensity of volleys. At 9:30 o'clock this morning fighting was going on between opposing parties of Unionists and Nationalists, who shot over barricades that had been erected at various vantage points. The military was active in preventing citizens from venturing into the streets which were deserted except by the active belligerents.

Hasemeier Says 1920 S. S. Convention is Best CRAWFRDSVILLK. Ind., June 23.

69th, of New York) and was killed at Chateau Thierry. After having been wounded in action he was carried to a dressing station from which he refused to be removed until more seriously wounded comrades had been taken to the rear. Before his turn came, the dressing station was blown up by a German shell. Ely was a native of Flushing, New York, and a descendant of General Schuyler, of the American revolution. His family has resided in Buenos Aires for about. 12 years.

Short News of City

V . ) Nusbaum Returns Home Charles Nusbaum, of Peabody, Kas., has returned home after several days with his brother, Lee B. Nusbaum, of 110 North Eleventh street. Jenkins Chosen Treasurer Miss C.

crawrordsville presented a gala ap- M. Sweitzer and Charles M. Jenkins, pearance today when the second gen-j local optometrists, have returned from eral session of the Indiana State Sun- St. Louis, where they attended the

national convention of the American optometrists. Mr. Jenkins was elected national treasurer. Mrs. Igleman Home After an unusually successful season Mrs. Clara Igleman, soprano, of "The Chocolate Soldier" company, has returned to her home, 408 South Eighth street. She

entered the company four months ago

day School association was called to order in the high school auditorium. Practically every building in the business part of the city was covered with flags. The general session was continued at 1:30 this afternoon, with E. H. Hasemeier, of Richmond, presiding. IVI. A. Honline again addressed the convention on "The Place of the Teacher in Religious. Education." It was announced at convention headquarters that more than 2,000 delegates had registered. This greatly exceeds all former attendance records. Mr. Hasemeier said that the 3 920 convention thus far has been by far the best ever held by the association. He also paid a high tribute to the city and county on the excellent way in which the convention had been handled. The convention will close Thursday, when the 1921 convention city will be chosen.

Buenos Aires Legion Post

Named for Rravt ,4 mprivrn ! AV ilson to bring back feasible idea; "U,"r" , 1 . "Can for work at the local association. Mis

under the auspices of St. John's Young People's society, in St. John's hall on South Fourth street at S p. m. Wednesday. EUward Stegruan and Meta Weyman have the title roles. Christian Endeavor Meeting Next Sunday evening will be the last meeting of the Christian Endeavor of the United Brethren church until September. Officers will be elected at this meeting for the coming year. Are Appointed Delegates Frank Chant and Russell Brown have been appointed delegates from the East Main Street Friends church to attend the State Christian Endeavor convention which convenes in Indianapolis Thursday, June 24. The Rev. E. Howard Brown, pastor of the church, will speak there Friday morning. The convention closes Sunday night, June 27. No other delegates from local societies are known to be going. Browns to Illinois Hiestand and Corwin Brown, students at Ann Arbor, formerly residents of Richmond, left Wednesday for Paris, III., to spend the summer after visiting with friends here. File Dissolution Certificate A preliminary certificate for dissolution was filed with the secretary of state Wed nesday by J. M. Hutton company. Tucker Case Up. The case of John Tucker, who was sentenced in July, 1917, to five to 14 years in the state reformatory and was afterwards trans

ferred to the state prion, was to come

G. 0. P. APPROVAL OF COMMITTEE GENERAL

(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. June 23 Republican leaders generally expressed approval today of the personnel of the executive committee which will conduct the party's president campaign Twenty-one members including seven women, will constitute the committee. In the meantime the nominee, Senator Harding, was working in an effort to adjust his affairs in Washington so he might leave early in July for his home in Marion. A celebration in his honor will be held there July 5, and on July 22 the senator will be officially notified of his nomination. ST. PAUL, Minn., June 23 With 550 precincts of 3,195 in the state missing, J. A. O. Preus, state auditor today continued to lead Dr. Henrick Shipstead, endorsed by the non-partisan league, for the Republican gubernatorial nomination as belated returns from Monday's primary drifted in. The vote was: Preus, 124,956; Shipstead, 109,845. For the Democratic nomination. Mayor L. C. Hodgson of St. Paul was ahead of R. W. Hargadine by more than six thousand votes with twothirds of the precincts heard from. Senator Harding received a letter today from William Cooper Procter, of Cincinnati, manager of General Wood in his campaign in which Procter promised the senator his loyal support both before and after the election to the end that a really great and useful Republican administration might be Becured. Plans were completed for the senator to leave Washington, July 3 for his home, where a homecoming celebration will be held, July 5.

in Richmond.

Listen to Band Hundreds of Natco

employes listened to the out-door band before the state board of pardons

luul-cu Ul - iaico oann Wednesday; Wednesday. Tucker was convicted on noon. The concert was given on the! charge of holding up two colored men

ni.i Kaunas aajoining the plant. Dill in Boston Howard A. Dill, of the Richmond City Water Works, is spending several days in Boston. He will return the last of the week. Goes to Geneva A vacation without a little work mixed in seems to be such an unnatural proposition that Thomas P. Wilson, boys' secretary of the "Y", will attend the school of boyV work, maintained at Lake Geneva, Wis., by the association college summer school, when he takes his first vacation in five years, beginning

Jiny b. it is the numose of Mr

Ki'KESENTS ALASKA AT DEMS' NATIONAL MEET

CRy Associate Press)

BUENOS AIRES. May 2fi The recently organized Buenos Aires post of the American Legion will be known as "Spencer Ely Post". Spencer Ely was the first American residing in Argentina to volunteer to serve his country in France and the first to fall of the Argentine contingent. On his arrival in France. Ely joined the 165th regiment (the1 old fighting

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m PRETTY FROCK FOR THE "LITTLE TOT" Pattern 3200 was employed for this style. It 4s cut in 4 Sizes: 4, 6, 8 and 10 years. An 8 year size will require 3 ',2 yards of 27 inch material. This model may be developed in blue chambrey with colored or white leather stitched braid, or in crepe, gingham, poplin, wash silk, shantung or linen. Unbleached muslin, with embroidery in rows of cross stitch in red or blue would be simple, serviceable and effective. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 12 cents in sliver or stamps. Address

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Size Address Pattern, Department, Palladium. patterns will be mailed to your address within one week.

Wilson will join Mr. Wilson at Lake

Geneva. Mothers Will Meet The regular mothers' meeting will be held at 1130 Sheridan street Thursday, at 2 p. m. The subject will be "Mother and Her Birthday." W, R. C. Meets Thursday The W. R. C. will meet Thursday afternoon at 2:30, in the post rooms at the court house. Society to Meet The Missionary society of the Second English Lutheran church will hold its evening meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Bescher. West First and Lincoln streets, Friday night. Mrs. John Hoiaday and Mrs. Bescher will be leaders. Miss Hartman Here Miss Louise Hartman, of Remington, Ind., arrived Wednesday, for several weeks' visit with her sister, Mrs. Walter Woodward and family on College avenue. Party is Postponed A party which was to have been given Wednesday night by the ladies of Mrs. R. C. Brunton's class of the First Methodist church has been postponed until some time next week. New Bible Course At the meeting and banquet held Tuesday night at the "Y" for the boys of the story Bible class, it was decided to conduct another class of six lessons, one each Saturday at 8:45 a. m., beginning with Saturday, June 26. Xorval Webb, assistant boys' secretary, will be in charge. The new course will be stories of New Testament men. To Rout Dirt Boy scouts of the "Y" will make themselves useful in the boys' department Friday night, with a campaign against dirt. Walls and ceiling will receive great care and the veil of dust will be removed by about a dozen husky lads. To Give Shower Women of the Aid society of East Main street Friends church will give a miscellaneous shower at the church. Thursday afternoon, in honor of Mrs. Frank Solomon, a bride of a week ago. Mrs. Soloman was formerly Miss Gertrude Clark. All women of the church are invited to attend the shower. Visit Relatives Here Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kenny, of Milton, were guests of Mrs. Kenny's sister, Mrs. E. R. Fulgham, 1203 E. Main. Thursday. Comedy Is Planned "A Crazy Idea" a comedy in four acts, will be given

MotherFriend ExpectdntMothers Used By Three Generations1. At All Ormtflsta

MADF1ELDREGULATOII CO Otrr. D, ATUIKT. OC

Mrs. John Weir Troy, photographed on arrival at San Francisco, s Mrs. John Weir Troy is the Democratic national committeewoman of the territory of Alaska. She is already at San Francisco for the Democratic national convention. She is a native of Wisconsin.

Scion Of the Sun Worshipped By Every Japanese Citizen (Raymond M. Weaver, in Asia.) A common ritual in Japan is the worship of the imperial image. Every school treasures as its most honored relic, every boat of the Japanese navy carries as its most precious freight a colored lithograph of the emperor, the sacrosanet portrait. This lithograph is preserved as in the tabernacle of the covenant, and is exposed only on high occasion, when it is revered as the Consecrated Host. When by accident one of the regulation wooden buildings of the conventional pedagogical architecture catches fire, the most envied form of martyrdom is to lose one's life while rescuing the lithograph from the flames. It was not many years ago that a student won posthumous fame because of such a self-sacrifice. Nor is the sacrosanct Person treated with less elaborate ritual. When the emperor rides among his pf-ople there is none of the vulgar shouting of exuberant patriotism that rends the occidental royal ear; the awed subjects stand bowed in breathless silence. And it is a breach of etiquette and piety, usurping treason, to view the imperial passage from balconies, windows and airy coigns of vantage; in no sense must one "look down upon" the Scion of the Sun. Let the heat be tropical and the head weak; let rain, sleet and snow be descending in fury and the flesh be tender; still neither hat nor umbrella must betray the body as unequal to self-oblivious patriotic practices. Those who axe privileged to brave the imperial presence never exchange words

directly witn the Sun-descended; what

dialogue there is passes back and torth along a line of decently graduated intermediaries a transit guaranteed to dampen trivialities. When the imperial name is mentioned in printing, a space is left both before and after the sacred characters a modern marriage of journalism and piety. And when an emperor dies and on the Dragon ascends to the Yellow Springs the celestial transition is not made officially known until three weeks after the event; this to blanket the grief of the desolate empire. League Against Profiteers Enters Political Field MILWAUKEE. Wis., June 22 Every man to own his home, his machine and the fruits of his labor: these are the aims of the Producers Consumers Anti-Profiteering League, as announced at headquarters here by its chairman, F. L. McGowan. The league is a Wisconsin organization about two years old. To achieve these ends the league Is organizing, Mr. McGowan said, "the greatest co-operative and co-ordinate organization that the farmers and laborers have ever been connected with in this country." "The league is going into politics," he said, "to get laws on our statute books that will allow two farmers living on the same side of the road to trade horses and not be hauled before the United States courts as the milkmen were in Chicago last year." It has 12 men on organizing work in Wisconsin, is supporting the head of a formers' society for governor, and has its state ticket almost completed, Mr. McGowan reported. It. i?

now looking, he added, for 100 men

of the right sort for the general assembly.

A mosquito has 22 teeth.

( Brieh V ;

Night Watchman wanted at the W. H. Hood Co. Must furnish reference.

Sae TJlUk for infants & invalids Acir wrrr

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WOMEN'S LEADER ARRIVES AT DEM CONVENTION SCENE

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Mrs. George Bass. Mrs. George Bass, Chicago, chairman of the Democratic national bureau, is in San Francisco directh-pr the activites of the womer ther for the convention.

Falkland Whale Industry Is Studied and Reported New York Times The whale industry of the Falkland islands has recently been made the subject of a careful study by the Royal Geographical Society of England, and a report has been presented to parliament urging the fitting out of a research expedition with , the object of facilitating the whaling and other industries in that distant section south and southeast of Cape Horn. The dependencies of the P Jkland islands include a sector of tne Antarctic land, and the whaling field there is of greater importance than in any other part of the world. Some idea of its worth may be seen from the fact that the value of the oil obtained there during the nine years from 1909 to 1917 aggregated more than $55,-000,000.

200 ATTEND EPWORTH LEAGUE MEETING AT GREENFIELD GREENFIELD. Ind., June 23. Two hundred delegates are here for the annual two-day convention of the Epworth League of the Richmond district. North Indiana conference of the Methodist Episcopal church. The officers of the district league are: C. G. Yeomans, Dunkirk, president; Earl Abel, Hagerstown, first vice-president Anna Arbogast, Losantville, secL.id vice-president; Anna Lewis, Middletown, third vice-president; Agnes K. Ross, Winchester,

fourth vice-president; Gertrude Co-

field, Newcastle, secretary; and Ira

E. Anders, Union City, treasurer.

Sure Relief

B

6 Bell-ans HoUwater Sure Relief

E LL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION

Dr. George D. Leary. who, with

Mrs. Leary, is the league's missionary

in China, will deliver an address dur

ing the convention.

I SiiiiililiiiK

Another Earthquake Is Felt

'By Associated Pross) j LOS ANGELES, Cal., June 23. A slight earthquake at 4 a. m. was felt! chiefly in the southern section of Los I

Angeles and at Inglewood, which sustained the heaviest damage in the

shock of Monday night, today caused no damage.

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